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The included The included VST Instruments VST Instruments

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Operation Manual by Ernst Nathorst-Bs, Ludvig Carlson, Anders Nordmark, Roger Wiklander Quality Control: Cristina Bachmann, Heike Horntrich, Sabine Pfeifer, Claudia Schomburg The information in this document is subject to change without notice and does not represent a commitment on the part of Steinberg Soft- und Hardware GmbH. The software described by this document is subject to a License Agreement and may not be copied to other media except as specically allowed in the License Agreement. No part of this publication may be copied, reproduced or otherwise transmitted or recorded, for any purpose, without prior written permission by Steinberg Soft- und Hardware GmbH. All product and company names are or trademarks of their respective owners. Windows, Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows 2000 are trademarks of Microsoft Inc. Steinberg Soft- und Hardware GmbH, 2000. All rights reserved.

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Introduction
This chapter covers the functions and parameters for the included VST Intruments. The following VST Instruments are included and installed with Cubase VST.

Neon - a software synthesizer. See page 4. VB-1 a virtual bass instrument built on realtime physical modelling principles. See page 6. LM-9 - a drum machine See page 8. Universal Sound Module - a sound module with over 70 MB of sampled waveforms. See page 10.

For specifics about how to install, set up and activate VST Instruments please refer to the chapter VST Instruments in the Getting into the Details documentation.

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The Neon

The Neon is a simple software synthesizer. It has the following properties:

The Neon is polyphonic with up to 16 voices. However, since each added voice consumes CPU power, the maximum polyphony may be limited by the speed of your computer. The Neon receives MIDI in Omni mode (on all MIDI channels). You dont need to select a MIDI channel to direct MIDI to the Neon. The Neon responds to the following MIDI messages: MIDI Note On/Off (velocity governs volume). Volume. Pan (remember to pan the two Instrument channels hard Left/Right if you want to use MIDI Pan messages). Pitch Bend ( 2 semitones). Modulation (vibrato). Furthermore, all parameters can be automated as described in the Getting into the Details chapter VST Instruments.

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Neon Parameters:
Parameter Range Waveform LFO Speed Description Selects an octave range for the oscillators: 16, 8 or 4 feet. The basic waveform for the oscillators: Triangle, Sawtooth or Square. Governs the speed of the vibrato. The vibrato depth is controlled via MIDI Modulation messages (for example, using the Mod Wheel on your MIDI controller). Allows you to detune the second oscillator 7 semitones. By setting this to a value close to twelve oclock, you will get fine detuning, for a warmer, fatter sound. The Cutoff Frequency for the filter, governing the amount of high frequencies in the sound. On the Neon, the Cutoff control also serves as a Depth control for the Filter Envelope (VCF Attack, Decay, Sustain, Release), so that the lower the setting of the Cutoff parameter, the more will the filter be affected by the Filter Envelope. The Resonance control for the filter. Raise this for a more hollow, pronounced filter effect. The Filter Envelope. Use these parameters to determine how the filter should open and close with time, when a note is played. The Amplitude Envelope. Use these parameters to determine how the amplitude (volume) should change with time, when a note is played.

Osc 2 Detune

VCF Cutoff

VCF Resonance VCF Attack, Decay, Sustain, Release VCA Attack, Decay, Sustain, Release

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VB-1
Damper switch. Pick (slide left or right to change position).

Pick-up position (slide left or right to change position).

Volume knob. Wave Morph knob.

The VB-1 is a virtual bass instrument built on realtime physical modelling principles. This has the following properties:

VB-1 is polyphonic with up to 4 voices. VB-1 receives MIDI In Omni mode (on all MIDI channels). You dont need to select a MIDI channel to direct MIDI to the VB-1. VB-1 responds to the following MIDI messages: MIDI Note On/Off (velocity governs volume). Volume. Pan (remember to pan the two Instrument channels hard Left/Right if you want to use MIDI Pan messages).
Furthermore, all parameters can be automated as described in the Getting into the Details chapter VST Instruments.

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VB-1 Parameters:
Parameter Volume Damper Pick-up position Description This regulates the VB-1 volume. This switch controls the length of time the string vibrates after being plucked. By dragging the mic left or right you can change the tone. Positioning it towards the bridge position produces a hollow sound that emphasises the upper harmonics of the plucked string. When placed towards the neck position, the tone is fuller and warmer. This determines where along the length of the string the initial pluck is made. This controls the roundness of the tone, just like on a real guitar. This knob selects the basic waveform that is used to drive the plucked string model. This parameter can drastically change the sound character. The control smoothly morphs through the waves. It is possible to create sounds that have no relation to a bass guitar with this control.

Pick position Wave Morph

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LM-9
Program switch Volume fader (one for each sound). This sets the global velocity sensitivity for LM-9.

Pad (one for each drum sound). Press to audition the drum sound assigned to the Pad, or to select a sound for adjusting pan.

This adjusts the Pan (the position in the stereo image) for the individual drums. The setting is applied to the currently selected drum , indicated by a lit yellow LED over the Pad button.

The LM-9 is a simple drum machine. It has the following properties:

LM-9 is polyphonic with up to 9 voices. LM-9 receives MIDI in Omni mode (on all MIDI channels). You dont need to select a MIDI channel to direct MIDI to LM-9. LM-9 responds to the following MIDI messages: MIDI Note On/Off (velocity governs volume). Furthermore, all parameters can be automated as described in the Getting into the Details chapter VST Instruments.

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LM-9 Parameters:
Parameter Velocity Description This sets the global velocity sensitivity for LM-9. The higher the value, the more sensitive LM-9 will be to incoming velocity data. If set to 0, the sounds will play back with a fixed velocity value.

Volume sliders The volume sliders are used to adjust the volume for each individual drum sound. Pad Panorama The Pads are used for two things: To audition the individual drum sounds, and to select a sound for adjusting pan. This is used to position an individual sound in the stereo image. The setting applies to the currently selected sound, indicated by a lit yellow LED over the Pad button.

Drum sounds
LM-9 comes with two sets of drum sounds: Acoustic and Beat Box. Acoustic features samples of an acoustic drum kit and Beat Box features classic analog drum machine sounds. The table below shows how the drum sounds are assigned to note values on your MIDI keyboard. The mapping is GM compatible:
Drum sound Bass Snare Hi-Hat O-Hi-Hat Tom 1 Tom 2 Tom 3 Crash Ride Note value C1 D1 F#1 A#1 D2 B1 A1 C#2 D#2

Switching the sets


Use the Program button to switch between the two supplied drum sets, just like you switch between effect programs.

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Universal Sound Module (USM)

The USM is a General MIDI compatible sound module. General MIDI (GM) is a standard set up by the MIDI Manufacturers Association (MMA) and the Japanese MIDI Standards Committee (JMSC). It defines a standardized group of sounds and the minimum requirements for General MIDI compatible synthesizers or sound modules, so that a specially prepared sequence or MIDI file that is sent to the instrument via MIDI will play back the correct sound types, regardless of make and model of the instrument. MIDI identifies sounds by their program change number. Before the General MIDI standard was introduced, the same MIDI program change number often addressed totally different types of sound in any two synthesizers or sound modules from different manufacturers, eg. a flute type sound in one instrument and a piano type sound in the other. With the introduction of General MIDI standard compatible instruments this changed. These instruments use the same program change numbers for the same types of instruments. So, if the person that prepared a sequence or MIDI file wants the melody to be played by a piano, he can use a certain program change command embedded into the sequence to automatically select a piano sound in any GM compatible sound module. The GM standard, however, does not specify in great detail how that piano should sound. It is simply assumed that the manufacturer reproduces an acoustic piano within the capabilities of the instrument. A consequence of this was that, depending on the GM module used, a song could sound very different, even though the instrument sounds were mapped correctly. This problem is solved by the Universal Sound Module! Cubase users can make sure that their music created using the USM will sound exactly the same when played back on another computer, because the sound reproduction is no longer hardware based - perfect for Rocket users!

RocketPower is described in a separate document.

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The USM features over 70 MB of sampled waveforms and four stereo outputs. The USM is polyphonic with up to 96 voices. The USM receives MIDI in 16 channel Multi mode (simultaneous multi-timbral playback on 16 MIDI channels). In other words, one USM unit can play up to 16 MIDI Tracks - each with a different sound. The USM responds to the following MIDI messages: MIDI Note On/Off (velocity governs volume). Volume. Pan. Pitch Bend ( up to 12 semitones). Modulation (vibrato).

Selecting Sounds

According to the General MIDI Standard, MIDI channel 10 is reserved for drums. This can not be changed.
The USM features 128 different sound patches. Selecting programs is done by sending program change messages, either numerically (using the Prg value field in the Inspector), or by selecting from the Patchfield pop-up menu (see the chapter VST Instruments in the Getting into the Details document).

Selecting Outputs
The USM features four stereo outputs, allowing for flexible routing of sounds to different effect processors etc. By default, all MIDI channels are routed to USM stereo output 1.

To select another output, click the Output field below the Channel Activity indicator for the MIDI channel you wish to direct to anther output.

This opens a pop-up allowing you to select one of the four stereo outputs.

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USM Parameters:
Parameter Master Volume Pitchbend Range LFO Speed Description Sets the master output volume for the USM. Sets the range for incoming Pitchbend messages (selectable beween 1 to 12 semitones). Governs the speed of the vibrato. The vibrato depth is controlled via MIDI Modulation messages (for example, using the Mod Wheel on your MIDI controller). These light up to indicate activity on the corresponding MIDI channel. Clicking in this field opens a pop-up allowing you to direct the corresponding USM MIDI channel to one of the four available stereo outputs.

MIDI channel activity indicators 1-16 Output 1-16

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